Behind the Top 100: Around the World with Bach’s Cello Suites

This year, we’re taking you “Behind the Top 100”, spotlighting select pieces on KUSC’s Top 100 Countdown with fun and informative blogs about the music you love.

Can Bach’s Suites for Solo Cello change the world?

“I believe that culture – the way we express ourselves and understand each other – is an essential part of building a strong society. My hope is that together we can use Bach’s music to start a bigger conversation about the culture of us”.
– Yo-Yo Ma

Yo-Yo Ma is spending two years traveling the world to prove the power of music to bring people together. The vehicles for his creative message are the six Cello Suites of Johann Sebastian Bach, which he is currently performing in concert halls, paired with what he calls “a day of action” in each city or town, bringing Bach’s music to schools, and community centers, and other non-traditional “concert halls”.

Yo-Yo Ma | Photo by Todd Rosenberg Photography

The Cellos Suite No. 1 has landed at #72 on The KUSC Top 100 list – and it’s no wonder what with all the attention given to Yo-Yo Ma’s third new recording of them, and his highly publicized world tour!

Under the heading “Culture Connects Us”, Ma and his team asked artists from 36 countries to send in a video showing how they express themselves and help to bring their community together. In the video, you can see musicians and dancers, gardeners, cooks, weavers, soccer players, and paddle boarders from Argentina to Uzbekistan, Japan, Portugal, the US, South Africa and more.

Of course, Yo-Yo Ma isn’t the only musician drawn to the Cello Suites. Pablo Casals was 13 years old when he came across the mostly unknown published manuscript of Bach’s suites in a second-hand shop in Barcelona in 1890. He began performing them publicly in 1901, made the first ever recording in the 1930s, and essentially showed the world that these seemingly simple “student exercises” invited much deeper listening.